To help you understand the differences between FSAs, HRAs, and HSAs, please review the chart below. It will assist in deciding which account would complement the health plans your organization offers. Who is eligible? Are self-employed individuals (including more than 2% shareholders of a Subchapter S corporation and partners in a partnership) eligible? Is funding with cafeteria plan salary reductions permitted? Who can contribute? Can unused amounts be carried over to the next year? What medical expenses are eligible for reimbursement? Any employee, subject to employer-designed exclusions. The employer must offer a group health plan to those eligible for the health FSA, though the employee does not have to be enrolled in the health plan in order to be eligible for the health FSA. Any employee, subject to employer-designed exclusions. HRA eligibility must be tied to enrollment in group health plan or meet other options defined within IRS Notice 2013-54. Any individual who is covered under an HDHP (as defined in Code 223), is not entitled to Medicare, and cannot be claimed as a tax dependent. With certain exceptions, the individual cannot have any non-hdhp health coverage. Yes, they are eligible to open an HSA and take the HSA credit on their 1040. They will not be eligible to participate in a cafeteria plan used to fund HSAs in the workplace. Employee salary reductions are limited to $2,500 per plan year. Employer or employee (employee salary reductions limited to $2,500 per plan year). Employer contributions must meet HIPAA excepted benefit rules or will disqualify the health FSA under ACA. Generally no, but an employer may amend their plan to allow a carryover of up to $500, or a grace period of up to 2-1/2 months during which claims may be incurred. employee, spouse, children under age 27 and dependents, incurred during the coverage period. Cannot reimburse insurance premiums. Cannot reimburse qualified longterm care services. Not for an HRA. It is permitted for the health Employer only (except for COBRA premiums and possibly other employee after-tax contributions). employee, spouse, children under age 27 and dependents, incurred while coverage is in effect, including premiums for eligible health insurance and long-term care insurance, subject to employer-designed limitations. Cannot reimburse qualified longterm care services so long as the HRA is a flexible spending arrangement. HSA holder or any other person (including holder's employer or family member). account holder, spouse, and dependents incurred after HSA established, other than insurance premiums (with limited exceptions for COBRA coverage, long-term care insurance, health coverage while drawing unemployment compensation, and, if 65 or older, any health insurance except a Medicare supplemental policy).
Are distributions (or cashouts) for non-medical expenses permitted? Must coverage be elected/provided for a full 12 month period, and are there prohibitions on midyear changes? Do the uniform coverage rules apply, requiring the annual coverage amount to be available as of the first day of the plan year? Can amounts that are unused at termination of active employment continue to be spent down? To be reimbursable, must claims be incurred during current period of coverage? Is expense substantiation Is claims adjudication That is, must someone other than the covered employee or individual process and approve the claim? Distributions cannot be restricted to pay or reimburse only qualified medical expenses. However, distributions for nonmedical expenses are taxable and subject to a 20% excise tax (certain exceptions apply). Generally no. Cannot use unused amounts to pay for claims incurred after termination (except as COBRA or a plan's grace period may allow). Not for an HRA. Yes for health plan funded through a cafeteria Coverage may be prorated by plan design (e.g., employee has $100 credited to a bookkeeping account each month). HRA can permit unused amounts to be used until depleted to pay for claims incurred after termination (COBRA may also apply). Yes, but there is a big exception. Claims incurred but not reimbursed due to an insufficient HRA balance can be reimbursed in subsequent year if the individual was a participant when the claims were incurred and is still a participant. Yes, for health plan funded through a cafeteria Not for an HSA. IRS guidance confirms that the 12-month coverage and election change rules do not apply even for HSAs offered through a cafeteria But IRS guidance indicates that employers may choose to accelerate funding of HSA salary reduction elections under a cafeteria plan, or of employer HSA contributions outside of a cafeteria plan, so long as certain requirements are met. HSAs are non-forfeitable and portable. Distributions for qualifying medical expenses will be tax-free if incurred at any time after the HSA is established. State trust law determines when an HSA is established. HSA account holder must retain records.
Can an individual participate in more than one of these vehicles at the same time? Are there ordering rules that apply? Do Code 105(h) nondiscrimination requirements apply? Do Code 125 nondiscrimination requirements apply? Is a trust account Are account earnings taxable? An employee who is covered by a health FSA may also participate in an HRA. health FSA will make an individual ineligible for an HSA. But a limited-purpose health FSA or a high-deductible health FSA will not prevent HSA eligibility. Generally, health FSAs must be payors of last resort vis-a-vis an HRA. But HRAs and health FSAs can be drafted to require that the HRA pays only after health FSA amounts are exhausted. have been reimbursed elsewhere. An employee who is covered by an HRA may also participate in a health FSA. HRA will make an individual ineligible for an HSA. But a limited-purpose HRA, a highdeductible HRA, a suspended HRA or a retirement HRA will not prevent HSA eligibility. Generally, health FSAs must be payors of last resort visa-vis an HRA. But HRAs and health FSAs can be drafted to require that the HRA pays only after health FSA amounts are exhausted. have been reimbursed elsewhere. health FSA or HRA will make an individual ineligible for an HSA. But a specially designed health FSA or HRA will not prevent HSA eligibility. HRA or health FSA participants do not need to exhaust their HSAs before seeking payment or reimbursement through the HRA or health FSA. (Note: The box above describes the limited HRA or health FSA designs that do not interfere with HSA eligibility.) have been reimbursed elsewhere. No, for an HSA, but employer contributions made outside a cafeteria plan are subject to comparability requirements. Yes, for a self-insured HDHP. Yes, for health FSAs offered under a cafeteria No, not by the Code, but possibly by ERISA (no trust if health FSA complies with ERISA Tech. Rel. 92-01, including that reimbursements are made directly out of the general assets of the employer). If reimbursements are made out of the general assets of the employer and account funds are not set aside in a separate account, there are no earnings to be taxed. If funds are deposited in a VEBA, earnings generally are not taxed. HRAs cannot be offered under a cafeteria But the nondiscrimination rules will apply to the group health plan offered under a cafeteria No, not by the Code, but possibly by ERISA (e.g., unclear if trust required for COBRA premiums or any other after-tax contributions). If reimbursements are made out of the general assets of the employer and account funds are not set aside in a separate account, there are no earnings to be taxed. If funds are deposited in a VEBA, earnings generally are not taxed. May debit cards be used? Yes, for an HSA or HDHP offered under a cafeteria No (except unrelated business income will be taxed under Code 511).
ERISA for ERISA Covered Employers Is it an ERISA plan? (If a plan is subject to ERISA, various requirements will apply) Is there a funding requirement? Are there plan assets for ERISA purposes? Is an ERISA Form 5500 required to be filed? Do ERISA SPD and other disclosures and adherence to ERISA s benefit claims procedures apply? Do ERISA fiduciary rules apply? Is a plan document Yes, unless plan maintained by governmental entity or church (ERISA does not apply). While there is no requirement to set funds aside in a separate account, an employer may choose to do so. But any such funding may invoke ERISA s trust requirement if amounts are segregated from general assets. Even for plans that are treated as unfunded under ERISA Tech. Rel. 92-1, salary reduction amounts are plan assets for purposes of ERISA's exclusive benefit and fiduciary duty rules. Exception for small (fewer than 100 participants) unfunded Yes, unless plan maintained by governmental entity or church (ERISA does not apply). Employers may decide to fund (i.e. set aside funds) as potential liability increases. Any such funding may invoke ERISA s trust requirement if amounts are segregated from general assets. With no employee contributions, HRAs generally do not have plan assets so long as all reimbursements are paid directly out of general assets of the employer and not from a special fund segregated from the general assets of the employer. Exception for small (fewer than 100 participants) unfunded Generally no, unless the employer takes action that triggers ERISA under DOL guidance. Employer contributions alone do not trigger ERISA. The Code requires that HSA contributions be put in trust. ERISA s trust requirements will also apply to an employersponsored HSA that is an ERISA Generally no. But yes for an an ERISA Plan (i.e., employer contributions and employees pre-tax salary reductions would be plan assets). Generally, no. Yes for an an ERISA Generally, no. Yes for an an ERISA
Other Laws Exception for most (not all) Exception for HRAs that fall health FSAs funded with salary within the technical definition of a reductions. health FSA. Do HIPAA s portability, certificates of creditable coverage, and health status nondiscrimination provisions apply? Do HIPAA s administrative simplification (including privacy) provisions apply? Does COBRA apply? Are Creditable Coverage Disclosures required under Medicare Part D? Do the Medicare Secondary Payor (MSP) reporting rules apply? Yes, for an HDHP and for an an ERISA Special rules apply to governmental plans and to church plans. Yes, for an HDHP and for an an ERISA There is a special rule for qualifying health FSAs. If HRA falls within the technical definition of health FSA, the special rule for qualifying health FSA will apply. Generally not for HSAs. COBRA may apply to an employersponsored HSA that is an ERISA plan and/or to HSAs sponsored by state and local government employers. Yes for HDHP. No for HSAs. Yes for HDHP. For HRAs with a balance of $5,000 or more. Source: Thomson Reuters Checkpoint July 2014